Thembisa Mshaka: Forgiving Chris Brown

Forgiving Chris Brown: Re-post & Update

I am on record as being one who advocated for the forgiveness of the multi-talented, multi-platinum Chris Brown as far back as February 2009, when the most media and much of the public wanted to banish and boycott him forever. His missteps with the media in the aftermath turned the fury way up, as he looked far from remorseful—especially in contrast to Rihanna’s composed, deliberate testimony on 20/20. I understand the fury; I was furious about his assault of Rihanna on Grammy Night 2009 too.

But this rigid, visceral approach to such a layered issue is neither humane nor realistic. Endless castigation does not break the cycle of relationship violence. If we want young men, especially young men of color, to stop abusing women, we must condemn the behavior, and support the full rehabilitation of the person. Ron Artest has shown us that therapy can help anyone rise to become a champion in work and in life. Chris must seek help from psychological professionals, spiritual counselors, and anger management experts. Chris is going to be atoning and reconciling for years to come. That process is well underway.

The part we as consumers, fans, and members of the media can support him with is the revitalization of his career. Chris Brown is a gifted young performer who deserves to make a living at what he is passionate about. BET provided Chris Brown with the opportunity of a lifetime on the 2010 BET Awards: to pay homage to his mentor Michael Jackson with a powerful medley of the King of Pop’s hit songs and signature dance routines. True to form, the media looked for the worst from a heartfelt and otherwise technically flawless performance–until the part where Chris broke down emotionally in an effort to sing “Man In The Mirror”. His sincerity was questioned. His tears, snot and hoarse voice were called ‘staged’. Just another signal that the path of least resistance, further vilification of the young Black male, was being tread yet again. A brother can’t even emote!

But the audience on their feet at the Shrine and millions on couches across America knew that what he was feeling was very real: the overwhelm of Michael passing and finally being able to commemorate his idol’s life; the passage of the hardest of his own 21 years; the energy of the room singing when he could not, crying with him, releasing with him. This is what it means to be human. This collective catharsis was an important step in the healing process for everyone who empathizes with Chris and wishes him well. It’s exactly why that moment was the one everyone was talking about the morning after and well into this week.

The crime will not be forgotten, but the man needs to be forgiven.

We say we want him to take a look at himself and make a change; change is hard. Let him do it.

This past February, Chris Brown shocked the world. In the wee morning hours of the Grammy Awards, he brutally assaulted his then-girlfriend Rihanna. On June 22, 2009, Chris Brown pled guilty. The judge handed him his sentence, convicting Brown of felony assault, mandating him to keep his distance from Rihanna (50 yards for five years), and to serve 5 years of probation including 180 days of community labor. Brown was also ordered to enroll in a domestic violence counseling program. Brown’s face registered remorse and relief that day in court; looked like it dawned on him how close he came to prison time. But was he truly sorry?

It was hard to tell. Brown’s camp released a tepid statement: “Words cannot begin to express how sorry and saddened I am over what transpired. I am seeking the counseling of my pastor, my mother and other loved ones and I am committed, with God’s help, to emerging a better person.” Meanwhile photos of the 19-year-old partying hard in Miami contrasted those of a sorrowful Rihanna in the days that followed. His silence was as palpable as his absence from television and radio. Suddenly the freckle-faced crooner resurfaced and sent a video message to the world while bowling with rapper Bow Wow on May 26: “I’m not a monster… I got a new album droppin’.” Five months after his love quarrel-gone-awry, Brown released another video apologizing: “I take great pride in me being able to exercise self-control and what I did was inexcusable.”

Was his gesture too little too late? Not only for his victim, Rihanna, but for his fans and critics? I conducted an informal poll on Facebook and Twitter. While the media was castigating him, I blogged [hyperlink to original post here] back in February that the public was too quick to dismiss him and predict his career’s end. That compassionate condemnation was in order, not excommunication.

Perhaps the apology is a hard pill to swallow because Brown seemed so cavalier after the debacle. Judging by the many responses I received, I gleaned that his silence, while understandable at the advice of counsel, allowed the negative perception of this young man to fester into the selling of T-shirts emblazoned with his image and a striking slash through his face and dubbing his namesake a slang term synonymous with a “beat down” as in “Don’t get Chris Brown-ed.”

The Twitterverse had much to say about Brown’s remorse. “Why not release the video the day after the verdict?” asked one Tweeter. Another said Brown’s apology would have been deemed more sincere and set a strong example to his young fans about facing consequences if he’d done so immediately after the final verdict. Some believe his public remorse opens the door for fans to begin liking him again with one female tweeter professing: “Chris Brown, I love you more than ever.” But it was a male respondent who expressed the optimism that forgiveness should render: “He’s young enough to change.”

Sure, the execution could have been tighter, but I challenge anyone to recall an apology that felt smooth as silk following an egregious action. Taking a slice of humble pie and expressing remorse is usually awkward and delayed, requiring time. Reconciliation takes patience and work and Brown has taken his first step. Some might argue that Brown’s timing is off, but I believe an apology has no expiration date. Brown deserves forgiveness. What if Chris Brown was your son, nephew or brother? Assuming a zero-tolerance policy on abuse is fine, but judging someone unfairly and withholding support can interfere or jeopardize the healing process and ultimately redemption. We can stand against violence by looking its perpetrators in the eye and demand that they be and do better, but remember, it’s never too late to choose forgiveness over judgment.

Thembisa S. Mshaka is a 17-year entertainment industry veteran and author of the mentorship and career guide, Put Your Dreams First: Handle Your [entertainment] Business

Comments

Very well spoken. Excellent article. Chris Brown has paid his dues. The performance was excellent and heartfelt. I love CB. He has be bestored with a GOD given talent that only he can express: let the man express it. First and foremost, Chris, I truly hope that you have forgiven yourself, for GOD has forgiven you. Not apologizing. Now you need to repent. For you others , the Bible says that if you do not forgive, then GOD will not forgive you. Stop judging this man, as that is not our job. Let him learn from this mistake and grow. I love you Chris Brown, and I am a die-heart fan of yours. God loves you too!

“Just another signal that the path of least resistance, further vilification of the young Black male, was being tread yet again.”

OK, so someone not only viciously beat his girlfriend but then essentially CELEBRATED with a vacation and reminded everyone “To buy his new album”. Then when his album didn’t sell he suddenly starts begging for forgiveness, and if we dare question his sincerity, then it’s because he’s black? That is absurd.

If he wants to honor MJ, that’s fine with me. And if his career rebounds, that’s fine with me too. But don’t hold him up as a martyr because the press is giving him a hard time. I hardly think that having to put up with a few barbs from some bloggers about his sincerity is an unfair price to pay for the crime he committed and the way he behaved afterwards.

Well, Chris admitted his mistake, I will definitely give him credit for that. But, “forgiveness” is earned, not given. And the atonement should fit the crime. This is a process, and he’s got to be in it for the long haul. I mean the guy gave someone a beat down. He’s lucky he’s not in jail. If he were a poorer Black man he would be. My hope is that once every body has “forgiven” him and his career is resurrected, he does not abandon the therapy.

“I challenge anyone to recall an apology that felt smooth as silk following an egregious action. Taking a slice of humble pie and expressing remorse is usually awkward and delayed, requiring time. Reconciliation takes patience and work and Brown has taken his first step.”

Thank you!!! I don’t recall seeing any interviews of Josh Brolin, James Brown and Don Cornelius and Brandy is still reluctant to talk about the vehicular homicide she was invovled in as well. I personally already forgave Chris. I mean recovering Mel Gibson, “Mr. Passion of Christ and I-have-a-church-on-my estate” was found to be a philander and now his pregnant ex-girlfriend is claiming he was abusive.

The only people who will know if Chris is sorry for his actions will be the chicks he dates in the future ONLY. I think people are too invested in the lives of celebrities that we take it personal when they do something against our morals. I hope people move forward but if they don’t that is fine too. All I ask is don’t stop those who do forgive CB from enjoying his music and more.

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[…] Thembisa Mshaka: Forgiving Chris Brown (via Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner-(The Blog)) Posted on June 29, 2010 by Davey D Forgiving Chris Brown: Re-post & Update By Thembisa Mshaka Peep the Breakdown FM podcast we did with Thembisa on this topic http://bit.ly/axcjDL I am on record as being one who advocated for the forgiveness of the multi-talented, multi-platinum Chris Brown as far back as February 2009, when the most media and much of the public wanted to banish and boycott him forever. His missteps with the media in the aftermath turned the fury way up, as he … Read More […]